By Michelle Alexander
From mid-1981 and for several years following, Die
teuflischen Schwestern aka Sexy Sisters made its way through
drive-ins and less reputable cinemas around Australia, where it was
inexplicably re-titled Swedish Nympho Slaves. Aside from plunging Jess
Franco completists into confusion, as Die Sklavinnen is also known as Swedish
Nympho Slaves in some territories, this alternate title appears, on the
surface, to be utterly pointless as there are no Swedish characters nor actors
in the film. The reason for this nonsensical decision appears to a canny
marketing decision by distributor Filmways to cash in on the tail end of the Scandinavian
softcore film craze in Australia (which had already been done to death by the
early 1980s). Beginning with the 1970 release of Swede Mac Alberg’s Fanny
Hill (1968), but particularly running rampant upon the remarkable success
of Danish sex comedy specialist John Hildbard’s Bedroom Mazurka (1970) –
at Melbourne’s Roma cinema it screened for an almost 2-year consecutive run,
from March 1972 to December 1973 – a deluge of clunkily dubbed European
softcore features were rechristened with new titles featuring the buzzword
“Swedish”, regardless if the film was not from that nation. Ehepaar sucht
gleichgesinntes (1969) materialised as Swedish Wife Exchange Club, Christa
(1971) turned up as Swedish Fly Girls and Wilder Sex
junger Madchen (1972) did the rounds as Love Play Swedish Style.
Changes in audience tastes and the advent of home
video meant the “sexy Swede” stereotype was well and truly running out of steam
by the time of Die teuflischen Schwestern’s rebirth as Swedish Nympho
Slaves in Australia, with final attempts to wring out every last dollar
from the trend via distribution of Walter Boos’ Drei Schwedinnen auf der
Reeperbarn aka Three Swedish Girls in Hamburg and Erwin C.
Dietrich’s High Test Girls aka Swedish Sex Service (both 1980). Notably,
Australian comedians were parodying the dubbed Scandi sex film phenomenon up
until the early 1990s, most prominently in the sketch comedy TV show Fast
Forward.
Australian Distributor Filmways Press Sheet
Australian Daybill